For almost ten years, we’ve been chronicling bits of news, notes and quick analysis here on this blog — from when it started during the summer of 2006 as “All Things Broncos” through a rebrand a few years ago as “First-and-Orange,” to a Super Bowl loss and, this past season, a win. One of our earliest pieces, from former writer Bill Williamson, took a look at prospects for the Broncos’ kick-returners.

The reason for its creation then was two-fold: At the time, “blogging” was very much a popular form of writing for people — a place to express personal insights and opinions, the kind typically reserved for longer columns. This provided a forum outside the normal conventions of traditional news writing. Second, it was a way for our writers to produce journalism without fighting against our clunky, outdated digital publishing systems.

With the redesign of The Denver Post, launched on Monday, we don’t have to fight those battles anymore. The “blogging” style of writing has very much been absorbed into our storytelling today. And as a result, all Broncos news, notes, analysis, commentary — and, yes, that includes more conversational writing — will be published on our main site. You can find everything we produce about the Broncos — stories, commentary, video and photos — at denverpost.com/sports/denver-broncos/, or simply bookmark denverpost.com/broncos and you’ll be taken there. You can also find news on our mobile sports app in the stores for Apple and Google Play. You can follow us on Twitter or our newly created Broncos Facebook page. The work here will still be searchable and will live on, and sometime this summer, we hope to migrate it all over to the main site. There are no changes in how we cover this team — just where all the content lives.

Thanks for following along all of these years, and if you have any questions our feedback, you can message us at feedback@denverpost.com.

Nicki Jhabvala is a Broncos beat writer for The Denver Post. She was previously the digital news editor for sports. Before arriving in Denver, she spent five years at Sports Illustrated working primarily as its online NBA editor. She also spent two years as a home page editor at the New York Times.